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1 Laufpass
m umg.: jemandem den Laufpass geben give s.o. his ( oder her) marching orders; (kündigen) auch give s.o. the boot, Am. give s.o. the pink slip; (Freund[in]) ditch ( oder drop) s.o.; den Laufpass bekommen get one’s marching orders; (entlassen werden) auch get the boot; Freund(in): be ditched ( oder dropped)* * *der Laufpasswalking papers* * *Lauf|passmjdm den Láúfpass geben (inf) — to give sb his marching orders (inf); Freundin etc auch to chuck sb (inf)
* * *Lauf·passRR<-es, -pässe>Lauf·paßALT<-sses, -pässe>* * *jemandem den Laufpass geben — (ugs.) give somebody his/her marching orders (coll.)
er hat seiner Freundin den Laufpass gegeben — (ugs.) he finished with his girlfriend (coll.)
* * *Laufpass m umg:jemandem den Laufpass geben give sb his ( oder her) marching orders; (kündigen) auch give sb the boot, US give sb the pink slip; (Freund[in]) ditch ( oder drop) sb;den Laufpass bekommen get one’s marching orders; (entlassen werden) auch get the boot; Freund(in): be ditched ( oder dropped)* * *jemandem den Laufpass geben — (ugs.) give somebody his/her marching orders (coll.)
er hat seiner Freundin den Laufpass gegeben — (ugs.) he finished with his girlfriend (coll.)
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2 jdm. den Laufpass geben
1. to chuck sb.2. to give sb. their marching orders3. to give sb. the push1. to ditch sb. coll.2. to jilt sb.(ugs.: jdn. aus dem Zimmer werfen)1. to kick sb. out2. to throw sb. out(ugs.: jdn. vor die Tür setzen)to show sb. the door(ugs.: sich von jdm. trennen)to pack sb. in -
3 Laufpaß
Lauf·passRR<-es, -pässe>Lauf·paßALT<-sses, -pässe> -
4 Laufpass
jdm den \Laufpass geben
См. также в других словарях:
give someone their marching orders — give (someone their) marching orders to tell someone to leave. Debbie s finally given her husband his marching orders after ten years of an unhappy marriage … New idioms dictionary
give somebody their marching orders — give sb their ˈmarching orders idiom (informal) to order sb to leave a place, their job, etc. Main entry: ↑marchidiom … Useful english dictionary
marching orders — UK US noun [plural] (US INFORMAL walking papers) ► HR, WORKPLACE if you give someone their marching orders, you ask them to leave a job, usually because they have done something wrong: »She was called into the manager s office and given her… … Financial and business terms
give marching orders — give (someone their) marching orders to tell someone to leave. Debbie s finally given her husband his marching orders after ten years of an unhappy marriage … New idioms dictionary
marching orders — UK [ˈmɑː(r)tʃɪŋ ˌɔː(r)də(r)z] / US [ˈmɑrtʃɪŋ ˌɔrdərz] noun [plural] informal an act of telling someone that they must leave a place or that they are no longer wanted, needed, or employed give someone their marching orders: The boss gave him his… … English dictionary
marching orders — march|ing or|ders [ martʃıŋ ,ɔrdərz ] noun plural INFORMAL an act of telling someone that they must leave a place or that they are no longer wanted, needed, or employed: give someone their marching orders: The boss gave him his marching orders… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
give someone their cards — (Brit. informal) DISMISS, get rid of, lay off, make redundant, let someone go, discharge; informal sack, fire, kick/boot out, give someone their marching orders, give someone the (old) heave ho, give someone the elbow/push. → card … Useful english dictionary
get your marching orders — get (your) marching orders give (someone their) marching orders to tell someone to leave. He d only been in the job a month when he got his marching orders … New idioms dictionary
get marching orders — get (your) marching orders give (someone their) marching orders to tell someone to leave. He d only been in the job a month when he got his marching orders … New idioms dictionary
Marching band — For the Swedish band, see Marching Band (band). Goin Band from Raiderland, a college marching band in the United States Video of the Tennessee Volunteers Pride of … Wikipedia
march — [[t]mɑ͟ː(r)tʃ[/t]] ♦♦♦ marches, marching, marched 1) V ERG When soldiers march somewhere, or when a commanding officer marches them somewhere, they walk there with very regular steps, as a group. [V prep/adv] A Scottish battalion was marching… … English dictionary